A more a propos, and the correct answer to my question is –
Tanglewood. Except for a few changes in schedule (see Tanglewood’s website),
Saturday mornings are rehearsal times for the next day’s afternoon concert.
Often throughout the summer season, I take in one or the other – rehearsal or
concert. On July 27 & 28, however, I enjoyed both “versions” of Dvorak’s
Symphony No. 9, dubbed “New World Symphony.” Other pieces in the program
included another Dvorak’s piece, “Carnival Overture,” and Prokofiev’s Piano
Concerto No. 3.

Why attend a rehearsal? Lots of reasons: listen to the
director’s pre-show lecture, attend when the day and time is convenient for you
(Saturday vs. Sunday), pay less for a ticket, enjoy a little more relaxed
atmosphere, eat a post-concert picnic lunch, appreciate the easier parking.
Most important to me, however, and I imagine to others, is a new and different
experience of hearing classical music. For example, a conductor often talks to
the musicians, giving them suggestions for improvement. Sometimes, entire
sections of the music are repeated to “get it” perfect. Not that my untrained
ears know the difference, it is obvious that the musicians and the conductor
do. Oftentimes, however, an entire piece will run straight through, with some
corrections made at its completion. For the audience, the rehearsal’s emphasis
is on education.

Why attend the concert instead of the rehearsal? Again, lots
of reasons: hear the finished product straight through, mingle with and experience
the camaraderie of concert aficionados, spend a little more money (but isn’t it
wonderful to support the arts?), lunch at a lovely Berkshires’ restaurant or
BYO lunch and eat on the lawn, finish your Saturday grocery shopping and other
errands and set Sunday as a day to relax while listening to the BSO (Boston
Symphony Orchestra).

As the BSO and Dvorak’s “New World Symphony” – both were
exquisite. I had heard bits and pieces of this long piece, but never in its
totality under July 28th. Whether listened to as a rehearsal with some starts
and stops and director comments or “the real thing” or both, Tanglewood is the
epitome of the Berkshires beauty and arts in one location.

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